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Kids View Too Many TV Ads for Booze, Study Finds

Kids View Too Many TV Ads for Booze, Study Finds

THURSDAY, Nov. 7 (HealthDay News) -- Too many young Americans are watching television ads for beer, wine and other alcoholic drinks, a new study contends.

The number and frequency of such ads exceeds the industry's own voluntary standard, said researchers from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore.

Under that standard, which was adopted in 2003, alcohol companies agreed not to place any ads on TV programs when more than 30 percent of the audience was likely to be younger than 21.

If ads were curtailed to meet that standard, the "payoff in terms of reduced risk of underage drinking and harms related to it could be quite substantial," study author David Jernigan, director of the school's Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, said in a Hopkins news release.

In the study, Jernigan's team looked at 2010 data from 25 of the largest TV markets in the country. They found that nearly one in four alcohol ads on a sample of programs most popular with viewers aged 12-20 exceeded the alcohol industry's voluntary standard.

"Alcohol use amongst teenagers is prevalent, and continues to account for the third leading causing of death amongst teenagers," noted Dr. Scott Krakower, assistant unit chief of psychiatry at Zucker Hillside Hospital in Glen Oaks, NY. "I have seen many youths place themselves at risk with excessive binge drinking, without realizing the serious consequences of what may occur."

Alcohol companies "should not be allowed to violate their voluntary standard, especially with programs geared to the underage population," he added. "Youth are more likely to model after these advertisements, which ultimately can result in serious implications."

Alcohol remains the most commonly used drug among young Americans and accounts
for an estimated 4,700 deaths among underage youth in the United States each year. Studies show that exposure to alcohol marketing increases the risk that underage youth will begin drinking, and drink more if they do start drinking.

THe study was published Nov. 7 in the CDC's journal Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

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